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Being a Trauma Informed Teacher: A Vital
Knowledge Set for Today's Teachers
A Special Presentation for Kentucky CEC
Presented by Steve Hutton, Director
Kentucky Center for Instructional Discipline
859-802-7806
KYPBIS.Org
Be Responsible Return promptly from breaks (Call Back Song)
Be an active participant
Use the law of two feet
Be Respectful Maintain cell phone etiquette (silent/vibrate mode)
Listen attentively to others (Attention Signal)
Limit sidebars & stay on topic
Texting permitted in hallway
Be Kind Enter discussions with an open mind
Respond appropriately to others’ ideas
Participant Expectations
Objectives 1. Define Trauma
2. Discuss the meaning of a trauma
exposed student.
3. Learn how the brain reacts to
trauma.
4. Discover strategies for successfully
working with trauma exposed students.
Self-Care Alert
• Step out and take a break
when needed.
• Talk to someone you trust.
• Use relaxation strategies.
Create 2 columns with the following headings…
DEFINITELY WANT TO TRY
IF I HAVE TIME...
What is Trauma? • Witnessing or experiencing an event
that poses a real or perceived threat
of death, serious injury, or sexual
violation
• The event and the individual’s
unique experience and perception of
the event
6
ACES
QUESTIONNAIRE
ACTIVITY
HO-1
What They Found
1. ACEs are common
2. ACEs occur together
3. ACEs are powerfully predictive of adult outcomes
4. The effects of ACEs are strong across groups of people with different backgrounds
ACE & School
Performance • Traumatized children are:
– 2.5x more likely to fail a grade in school
– score lower on standardized achievement
tests
– more likely to have struggles in receptive &
expressive language
– suspended & expelled more often
– more frequently placed in special education
Long-Term Trauma Impact–ACE Pyramid: CDC
Early Death
Disease, Disability, and
Social Problems
Adoption of Health-risk Behaviors
Social, Emotional, and Cognitive Impairment
Disrupted Neurodevelopment
Adverse Childhood Experiences
Mechanisms by Which Adverse Childhood Experiences Influence
Health and Well-being Throughout the Lifespan
Conception
Death
How Common is Trauma? • A good estimate is that 1 in 4 students has had some trauma
exposure
• In 2013, 20,005 children were victims of abuse or neglect in
Kentucky, a rate of 19.7 per 1,000 children, representing a 14.8%
increase from 2012. Of these children, 99.0% were neglected,
10.1% were physically abused, and 4.4% were sexually abused.
• The number of child victims increased 23.6% in 2015 in
comparison to the number of victims in 2009.
• Of Kentucky children in out-of-home care in 2013, 76.0% were
white, 9.8% black, 6.6% Hispanic.
Child Welfare League of America, from data from the US Department
of Health and Human Services, 2013, 2014, 2015.
http://www.cwla.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/06/2015-State-Fact-
Sheet-Kentucky.pdf 12 12
Do you have students who:
– witnessed domestic violence?
– are physically, emotionally or sexually abused?
– are neglected?
– are homeless?
– have family members in the military who are
fighting overseas?
– have experienced a natural disaster (e.g.,
tornado, house fire)?
Do we have students who:
– have been in a serious accident (e.g., car accident)?
– have been a victim of physical or sexual assault?
– have lost a loved one?
– live in homes with family members who abuse alcohol or other drugs?
– live in homes with family members with untreated mental illness?
Trauma Changes the Way Children
Interact with Others • Children who have experienced trauma may
be distrustful or suspicious of others,
leading them to question the reliability and
predictability of their relationships with
classmates and teachers. Research indicates
that children who have been exposed to
violence often have difficulty responding to
social cues and may withdraw from social
situations or bully others
The Trauma Lens
A shift in perspective
from:
“What’s wrong with
you?”
to
“What happened to
you?”
Trauma-Sensitive Lens
• A lens through which we evaluate
student behavior & student supports
• Drives not only what we do, but how
we do it
• Focus is on the underlying need
Without a Trauma-Sensitive Lens
Choosing to act out & disrupt classroom (e.g., disrespectful or manipulative)
Anger management problems, uncontrollable, destructive
Needs consequences to correct behavior
Refer for ADHD evaluation
• Adapted from Daniel & Zarling (2012)
Without a Trauma Lens
• Anger management problems
• May have ADHD
• Choosing to act out & disrupt classroom (e.g., disrespectful or manipulative)
• Uncontrollable, destructive
• Non-responsive
Uninformed response • Student needs consequences to
correct behavior or maybe an ADHD evaluation
Adapted from Daniel & Zarling (2012)
With a Trauma Lens
• Maladaptive responses (in school setting)
• Seeking to get needs met
• Difficulty regulating emotions
• Lacking necessary skills
• Negative view of world (e.g., adults cannot be trusted)
• Trauma response was triggered
Trauma-informed response • Student needs to learn skills to
regulate emotions, and we need to provide support
How do we see these students?
PBI
S
The Trauma Lens
A shift in perspective
from:
“What’s wrong with
you?”
to
“What happened to
you?”
Trauma-Sensitive Lens
• A lens through which we evaluate
student behavior & student supports
• Drives not only what we do, but how
we do it
• Focus is on the underlying need
Without a Trauma-Sensitive Lens
Choosing to act out & disrupt classroom (e.g., disrespectful or manipulative)
Anger management problems, uncontrollable, destructive
Needs consequences to correct behavior
Refer for ADHD evaluation
• Adapted from Daniel & Zarling (2012)
Without a Trauma Lens
• Anger management problems
• May have ADHD
• Choosing to act out & disrupt classroom (e.g., disrespectful or manipulative)
• Uncontrollable, destructive
• Non-responsive
Uninformed response • Student needs consequences to
correct behavior or maybe an ADHD evaluation
Adapted from Daniel & Zarling (2012)
With a Trauma Lens
• Maladaptive responses (in school setting)
• Seeking to get needs met
• Difficulty regulating emotions
• Lacking necessary skills
• Negative view of world (e.g., adults cannot be trusted)
• Trauma response was triggered
Trauma-informed response • Student needs to learn skills to
regulate emotions, and we need to provide support
How do we see these students?
PBI
S
The Invisible Backpack Trauma shapes children’s beliefs and
expectations about:
• Themselves
• The adults who care for them
• The world in general
For trauma exposed youth these thoughts often revolve around feelings of not being safe, not being cared for or not being worthy.
The Invisible Backpack • Many who survived trauma have learned to
expect and believe the worst about themselves
and about the people who care for them.
• These beliefs and expectations are like an
“Invisible Backpack” that children carry with
them from placement to placement, from
school to school, and from childhood into
adulthood.
Invisible Backpack Messages
• I am unlovable
• No one will take care of me
• Adults will hurt me
• Adults lie
• No place is safe
• You can’t hurt me, I’ll get you first
• I am invisible
• I am worthless.
• I am always in danger of being hurt or overwhelmed.
• I am powerless.
Negative Beliefs in the
Backpack about People
• Others cause pain, not comfort.
• Others are not safe and cannot be trusted.
• The world is a scary and dangerous place.
• You are unresponsive.
• You are unreliable.
• You are, or will be, threatening, dangerous, rejecting.
“Repacking the Backpack”
• What can we do to repack the Backpack with more positive beliefs and experiences?
• How can we help a child to become more resilient and to believe that he/she are safe, capable, and lovable?
• How do we protect a child from harm to allow him/her to view the world as safe?
• How do we nurture child's strengths and respond to his/her needs, and help a child feel capable of navigating the world?
“Repacking the Backpack”
How can we promote resilience in the
student by making him or her feel:
• Safe?
• Capable?
• Likeable/Lovable?
Giving a Safety Message
Use phrases like: “I will work hard to keep you safe in my classroom”
“I will do my best to get you to a safe place”
“You are always able to come to me if you are feeling scared. I will always do my best to help you”
“I am a safe person to talk to. I will always respect your thoughts and feelings”
Avoid phrases like:
“No one will ever hurt you again”
“I promise you will not have to go home to your mother”
“Nothing bad will ever happen to you at school”
“Keep your thoughts and feelings to yourself at school”
Trauma Reminders/Triggers Can be stimuli in the external environment
• Sight
• Sounds
• Taste
• Smells
• People
• Places
Can be stimuli in the internal environment
• Feelings
• Thoughts
• Memories
HO-6
Traumatic Stress Response Cycle
Source: Georgetown University Center for Child & Human Development. (n.d.). Stress and the developing brain: The stress response. Retrieved from Center for Early Childhood Mental Health Consultation website: http://www.ecmhc.org/tutorials/trauma/mod2_1.html
Fight, Flee, or Freeze (to protect)
Release of adrenaline &
cortisol
Hippocampus
35
Hypothalamus
Key Insight • Because of constant exposure to violence and
trauma, children and youth can become locked
into a permanent state of Fight/Flight.
• This makes these children and youth react to
normal experiences as if they were life and
death threats.
• This is not a rational/cognitive process. It is
wired into their physiological response.
• Children and adolescents in urban
environments experience higher rates of
exposure to violence.
• As a result, trauma experienced during
these sensitive periods has the potential
to be particularly harmful to brain
development. Traumatic experiences can
actually change the structure and
functioning of a child’s brains through
the activation of stress response systems.
• When youth are in a “triggered” state, the
“learning brain” (higher functions of the
frontal lobe) goes offline.
• Verbal warnings or rational arguments that
make demands on these higher functions may
escalate the situation as youth are
physiologically unable to access these
functions when they are in a triggered state.
Diagram of the Brain
Limbic System Prefrontal Cortex
Hippocampus
Brainstem
Amygdala
Adapted from https://usercontent2.hubstatic.com/6685109_f260.jpg
39
Trauma & Brain Development
Cognition
Social/ Emotional
Regulation
Survival
Cognition
Social/ Emotional
Regulation
Survival
Typical Development Developmental Trauma
Adapted from Holt & Jordan, Ohio Dept. of Education
• Slow Down – take a time out
– sit comfortably
– one thought at a time
– pay attention to natural rhythm of breath
• Orient Yourself – look around, notice surroundings: where you are, who is
with you
– focus on something of interest you can see or hear
• Self-Check – how much stress?
– how much control?
– if needed, use a stressbuster
42
But What Do I
Actually Do
Differently?"
Establish a Predictable Environment
Define and teach classroom routines
• How to enter class and begin to work
• How to predict the schedule for the day
• What to do if you do not have materials
• What to do if you need help
• What to do if you need to go to the bathroom
• What to do if you are handing in late material
• What to do if someone is bothering you
• Signals for moving through different activities
– “Show me you are listening”
• How to determine if you are doing well in class
• Establish a signal for obtaining class attention
• Teach effective transitions
Creating a Predictable Classroom
• Greet positively at the door
• Teach attention signal
• Beginning/ending of class ritual
• Teach behavior expectations
• Classroom celebrations
• Acknowledge appropriate behavior
Why Being Calm and
Respectful is Important
•Calm and respectful adult responses model appropriate behavior for students
•Emotional and disrespectful adult responses may escalate the emotional intensity of a situation or create a power struggle
‘Trauma-Sensitive’ Instructional
Correction Procedures
Assess the student’s situation
• What does the student need at this time?
• How emotionally activated is the student?
• Does the student feel safe?
• Are there any trauma reminders at work?
• What’s my tone of voice?
• Am I at the student’s level?
• Is there a need for more privacy to address this?
Trauma-Sensitive Schools Trauma-sensitive schools acknowledge the
prevalence of traumatic occurrence in
students’ lives & create a flexible
framework that provides universal
supports, is sensitive to unique needs of
students, & is mindful of avoiding re-
traumatization.
School-Wide Efforts Aligned with
Trauma Informed Care
• Positive Behavioral Interventions and Supports (PBIS)
• Restorative Practices
• Mindfulness Practices
• School health or wellness centers
• Any organized, structured, ongoing and intentional effort that partners with teachers to take the extra time to respond to student needs instead of punishing behaviors that are simply symptoms of these needs
“The fundamental purpose of PBIS is to make schools more effective & equitable learning environments.”
Rob Horner Co-Director of the OSEP Technical Assistance Center for PBIS
Predictable
Consistent Positive
Safe
PBIS and Trauma-Sensitive Schools
Steve Hutton, Director
Karen Bush, Area Coordinator
Terry Cook, Area Coordinator
Lea Brown, Area Coordinator
Cristy Tomes, Area Coordinator
Jo Craven, Area Coordinator
Phyllis Case, Area Coordinator
Ellen Whitley, Project Assistant
Contacts
www.kypbis.org 859-802-7806
260 Democrat Drive Frankfort, KY 40601